Title

The ice no.5

Artist

David Stephenson

About

Throughout his career, photographer David Stephenson has been drawn to sacred spaces, whether they are sites of religious worship or landscapes that cultivate a sense of the sublime. Stephenson’s affinity with the American New Topographic movement in the 1970s precipitated his fascination with the tradition of landscape photography. Pursuing new ways to represent the land outside the aesthetic strictures of the documentary approach, Stephenson’s work is, according to Australian writer Daniel Palmer, ‘imbued with romantic sensibility’ 1 and confronts philosophical concepts such as the infinite and the unknown with a minimalist sensibility and poetic acuity. Discussing his landscape photographs, Stephenson alludes to the way they ‘refer to the history of landscape imagery, because to recall this history is to recall the history of human landscape consciousness.’ 2

His 1991/1992 series ‘The ice’ depicts a landscape that exists at the edge of the known world and at the frontier of human comprehension. Shot in Antarctica, these stark photographs contain no figurative reference points. They are images of uninhabited landscapes on the point of erasure, their geographic features barely perceptible. It is difficult to orient oneself in these spaces because scale is indeterminate. There is nothing that identifies the images as either cropped close ups or vast panoramas of a desolate plane. The differentiation between land, air and sea is also ambiguous. These are insinuated or suggested landscapes evoked purely by slight changes in tone.

While subtle colour variation is the only thing that distinguishes one scene from another, the ice-blue tone that permeates each photograph is fabricated. To produce these images, Stephenson printed black and white photographs on colour paper and played with colour filters to achieve the desired hue. As nebulous abstractions, Stephenson’s ice photographs are poignant reminders of the immensity and impenetrability of the land and its capacity to evade and supersede human perception. Of his time in Antarctica, Stephenson has remarked: ‘nature does not appear to be benevolent or even awesomely hostile to humankind, as in the old sublime aesthetic of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Nature is simply indifferent.’3